Stocks higher on 3Q profits; Mattel jumps

View full sizeThe Associated PressTraders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange

Inflation is low, earnings are high, investors are happy.

Stocks
shot higher Tuesday, giving the market its biggest gain in a month.
Results at Mattel, Goldman Sachs, and Johnson & Johnson were all
above expectations.

It was the second day of broad gains following
a down week last week. Investors had been worried headed into the
third-quarter earnings season that corporate profits wouldn't be good
enough to justify the run-up in stocks in recent months. While earnings
haven't been out-of-the-park great, they haven't been as bad as some had
feared.

Also Tuesday, the Labor Department said consumer prices
rose just 0.1 percent last month, not counting food and energy costs.
And gasoline prices have come down since then. Low inflation leaves
consumers with more money to spend, and leaves the Federal Reserve free
to continue its efforts to boost the economy.

In addition, an
index of homebuilder sentiment came in at its highest level since 2006,
suggesting that the construction industry is making a comeback.

"The
picture of the economy is one that's still proving to be resilient to a
lot of the problems that investors are worried about," said Gary
Thayer, chief macro strategist for Wells Fargo Advisors.

In
afternoon trading, the Dow Jones industrial average was up 104 points at
13,529. The Standard & Poor's 500 index rose 12 points to 1,452,
and the Nasdaq composite rose 31 to 3,095.

The gains were broad,
with nine out of 10 industry groups in the S&P 500 index rising.
Telecom stocks had a tiny decline. Materials stocks rose more than 2
percent.

Toy maker Mattel jumped 4.9 percent after reporting that
brisk sales of American Girl dolls and Fisher-Price toys sent the
company's profit well above analysts' forecasts. The stock was up $1.72
to $37.14.

Johnson & Johnson rose 75 cents to $69.34 after revenues came in ahead of Wall Street's forecasts. IBM, CSX and Intel report after the bell. Intel was up 50 cents, or 2.3 percent, to $22.23.

Among other stocks making big moves:

Apple
rose $14.36, or 2.3 percent, to $649.13 after sending out invitations
for an event where it is expected to announce a smaller iPad.

Citigroup
rose 20 cents $36.86 following the sudden departure of CEO Vikram
Pandit, who had steered the bank through the 2008 financial crisis.
Pandit, who is also stepping down from the company's board, is being
replaced by longtime Citi executive Michael Corbat.

A123 Systems
Inc., a maker of electric batteries for vehicles, put its U.S.
operations into Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection and said its automotive
assets will be acquired by Johnson Controls for $125 million. A123's
stock plunged 18 cents to 6 cents.